@AndrasDeak I remember this working theory. My grandad explained it to me and it seemed a bit bonkers even as a kid. Do you know the current replacement theory that apparently catalysed life? I took my eye off the ball on this one
Back when I first joined the room, we had narwhals shooting lightning from the sky. One does have to wonder how the narwhals came to be. But that'll be answered in time, I guess
Access to XMLHttpRequest at 'http://localhost:5003/socket.io/?EIO=3&transport=polling&t=NZVDHlB' from origin 'http://localhost:3000' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
Ok, so "No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource." is starting to make more sent to me. You didn't do that with the header
@roganjosh because i don't know js or ajax so i can't write any line .. so if there 3rd party app it will be easy to me .. or if you can help me with ajax i will be thankful to you
i want confirm new email via link .. like fb or twiiter . when user change email he should active new email to save it in his profile
i have option that allow user to change email but without active or confirm new email i just want active new email
Our TA suddenly gave us a dataset and told us to fire it on our project, preprocessing of which is handled by code which we borrowed (with full academic integrity) from github
oh, never knew that @AndrasDeak..thanks for the info.
with open(path_raw_data + 'dic_mincutN.pkl', 'w') as f:
pickle.dump(dic_voca, f)
Getting : TypeError: write() argument must be str, not bytes
dic_voca is a dictionary mapping string (I think?) to integers, having read this : docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html , I don't know why it's not working.
i googled their name a bit and found that apparently it started out as an acronym.
> > Panda3D's name was once an acronym: "Platform Agnostic Networked Display Architecture."[4] However, since that phrase has largely lost its meaning, the word "Panda3D" is rarely thought of as an acronym any more.
"To successfully use Panda3D, you must be a skilled programmer. If you do not know what an “API” is, or if you don’t know what a “tree” is, you will probably find Panda3D overwhelming. This is no point-and-click game-maker: this is a tool for professionals" I'm now scared to use it in case I get stuck :D
I sense the psychic waves emanating from the quotes around "API" and "tree". The author really has been approached by querents that don't know what those are
I sense more... When the author told them "go learn what a tree and API are, and when you come back, I'll be happy to help you", they got all huffy and said "can't you just help me now? I've got from panda3d import * already, just fill in the rest for me"
In a completely unrelated topic, today I want to get my feet wet with OpenCV, with virtually no prior experience in the computer vision field. I think I'll start by emailing the core developer...
Well, the burden is on them to prove the project. You're going to invest £0 (which I think is $0 in the current exchange rate) so they have to "wow" you
In Numpy dataset, if we use reshape of input as follows given that dataset originally has 10 rows and two columns. The first column is empty while the second has 10 values.
series = read_csv('data.csv', header=0, index_col=0) data = series.values train_x, train_y = data[:, :-1], data[:, -1]
I know I often like to whimsically lead querents to the answer via socratic dialogue, but this time I'm just trying to make sure I'm literally looking at the correct documentation page
If my questions also happen to perfectly match a socratic dialogue that someone more clueful than me would lead, then that's great, I love to look smarter than I really am.
> Scylla and Charybdis were mythical sea monsters noted by Homer; [...] Scylla was rationalized as a rock shoal (described as a six-headed sea monster) on the Calabrian side of the strait and Charybdis was a whirlpool off the coast of Sicily. They were regarded as maritime hazards located close enough to each other that they posed an inescapable threat to passing sailors; avoiding Charybdis meant passing too close to Scylla and vice versa.
@Aran-Fey That may indeed be the root question, but because I am a simple man, I couldn't be sure until I had some clarifying details. If that is the question, I bet one valid answer is "yes, if you want to call a function that requires data in that particular shape"
Valid yet unhelpful, because it is true of literally any object
There's also a possibility that the real question is "reshaping in this way gives me an ndarray that doesn't seem very useful. What reshaping operations should I perform instead to produce a useful ndarray?"
Which would require an extra session of XY problem unpeeling in order to determine what counts as useful
Useful could mean "transposed", or "with some rows filtered out", or "in the correct shape for passing to contoso.frobnicate(ndarray)"... It's the wild frontier